A bill that would expand workplace protections for disabled Americans
gained unanimous Senate approval on Thursday, September 11.
The legislation, which was co-sponsored by 77 senators, sailed through on a
voice vote. Both presidential nominees, Sens. John McCain, R-Arizona, and Barack
Obama, D-Illinois, came out in support of the bill weeks ago.
The measure clarifies that Congress meant for the Americans with Disabilities
Act to be broadly interpreted. The original measure, which became law in the
early 1990s, required employers to make accommodations for disabled
employees.
The new bill, the ADA Amendments Act, addresses Supreme Court decisions that
critics say restricted the law. The court ruled in several cases that mitigating
measures—such as medication or prosthesis—make a person ineligible for
coverage.
In an unusual show of cooperation, disability advocates and the business
lobby compromised on the final bill, ensuring broad support on Capitol Hill. In
late June, the House approved a similar bill, 402-17.
“This was a slam-dunk,” said Keith Smith, director of employment and labor
policy at the National Association of Manufacturers. “The biggest hurdle was the
Senate calendar.”
Congress returned from its August recess on Monday and will be in session
until late September, when it will take another break to allow members to go
home and campaign.
It’s not clear whether all legislative business will be concluded by October,
but the window is closing quickly.
Both the House and Senate versions of the ADA bill reiterate that the
definition of a disability is a physical or mental impairment that
“substantially limits” one or more major life activities. They also increase the
number of activities covered, add a category of bodily functions and allow
workers to sue if they are “regarded as” disabled.
The House bill defines “substantially limits” as “materially restricts.” In
an effort to garner more support, the Senate avoids such sharpening of the
language.
“Instead, the bill takes several specific and general steps that,
individually and in combination, direct courts toward a more generous meaning
and application of the definition,” Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, said in a
Congressional Record statement in July.
Differences between the House and Senate bills won’t slow down the measure,
Smith said. He anticipates that the House will take up and pass the Senate
measure, bypassing the need for a conference committee.
“This is a high priority for [House Majority Leader Steny] Hoyer,” Smith
said. Hoyer, D-Maryland, is the author of the House bill.
The White House has not indicated its position on the bill, but a veto is
unlikely.
In addition to NAM, the Society for Human Resource Management and the U.S.
Chamber of Commerce were among the business groups that participated in a
coalition with disability advocates to push the bill through Congress.
As is the case with any compromise, no one was completely satisfied. The
business community accepted a bill that could increase litigation. But the final
language was less expansive than that contained in the original bill.
The lack of a specific definition of “substantially limits,” however, could
require courts to step in again.
“At the center of the continuum, the question [of who is disabled] is
probably straightforward,” said Neil Abramson, a partner at the law firm
Proskauer Rose in New York.
“At the margins, it’s more difficult. That will probably generate, at least
in the beginning, litigation,” he said.
HR departments will have to be fastidious about ensuring that language in
employee files pertains only to performance so that it doesn’t become fodder for
disability lawsuits.
“It’s going to require a fairly diligent HR function,” Abramson said. “The
nuances are fairly complicated and will be fairly significant as this plays
out.”
—Mark Schoeff Jr.
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